Teddix is an inventory system and asset management system. It collects hardware, software, and operating system information from machines running the Teddix agent. This allows system administrators to easily check, compare, and manage current and historical hardware and system information through a modern Web interface.

Client-side Security Exit for DTCC (SX4DTCC) is a solution that allows a company to perform verification with a DTCC (Depository Trust Clearing Corporation) queue manager. It operates with WebSphere MQ 6.0, 7.0, 7.1, or 7.5 in Windows, Unix, IBM i, and Linux environments. It works with Sender, Server, and Cluster-Sender channels of WebSphere MQ queue manager.

MQ Set UserID (MQSUI) is a new solution that allows a company the ability to explicitly set a UserID via a MQ Channel's Send, Receive, or Message Exit. It operates with WebSphere MQ 6.0, 7.0, 7.1, or 7.5 in Windows, Unix, IBM i, and Linux environments, and works with Server Connection, Receiver, Cluster-Receiver, and Cluster-Sender channels of WebSphere MQ queue manager.

yuck is a command line option parser for C that works on a minimal set of dependencies - only a C compiler and the m4 macro processor are required. It supports all the standard use cases: GNU-style long options (--option), condensable short options (-xab for -x -a -b), and optional arguments to long and short options (--foo[=BAR]), multiple occurrence of options (-vvv). Most importantly, it does not depend on libc's getopt() nor getopt_long().

MQ Channel Auto Creation Manager (MQCACM) is an MQ Channel Auto-Definition (MQ CHAD) exit which allows a company to control and restrict incoming connection requests to auto-create a channel. MQCACM is invoked when a request is received to start an undefined Receiver, Server-Connection, Cluster-Receiver, or Cluster-Sender channel. MQCACM can modify or clear the supplied default channel definition values for an instance of the channel, so there is no exit incompatibility (cross-platform or otherwise).

LifeV is a finite element (FE) library providing implementations of state of the art mathematical and numerical methods. It serves both as a research and production library. It has already been used in medical and industrial contexts to simulate fluid structure interaction and mass transport. LifeV is the joint collaboration between four institutions: École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (CMCS) in Switzerland, Politecnico di Milano (MOX) in Italy, INRIA (REO, ESTIME) in France, and Emory University (Sc. Comp) in the U.S.A.

Universal File Mover (UFM) manages the transfer of files. The user combines a series of Action commands to create the UFM Workflow XML file. These Action commands define which actions are to be taken, the order of the actions, and how errors are to be handled. UFM processes the Action commands as per the UFM Workflow XML file. UFM currently contains 41 Action commands. These action commands fall into five categories: WebSphere MQ Actions, Network Actions, File Actions, Control Actions, and Other Actions. UFM can transfer files in one of five ways, using WebSphere MQ, FTP, SFTP, SCP, or HTTP.